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Journal ArticleDOI

Attitudes to public expenditure and their relationship to voting preferences

Alan Lewis
- 01 Jun 1980 - 
- Vol. 28, Iss: 2, pp 284-292
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TLDR
However, these changes may be a function of the preferences the politicians feel the voters have rather than a reaction to the actual views and attitudes of the electorate as mentioned in this paper, and whether they are likely to affect the behaviour of the "floating voter" is open to doubt.
Abstract
THERE has been a great deal of interest shown in the growth of public expenditure among recent publications. This interest has mainly been concerned with investigations of the possible causes of this expansion and with predictions of future trends and their economic and political implications. It seems most likely that the total expenditure of a government is affected by a whole series of factors which interact with one another. Klein’ has argued that among the major influences are demographic changes in society (for example the growing number of retired and elderly), competitive pressures between government departments who may measure their success by their own expansion, and finally party political competition. I t is to the last of these factors that the present paper payi particular attention. While many would agree with Downs* that expenditures and taxation are a government’s principal policy tools it is not clear whether these can be used to maximize political support or that they have a major impact on voting behaviour. Observers and advocates of the political business cycle3 take the view that some of the interventions of government which modify the level of unemployment and the rate of price increases are carried out in an attempt to increase the administration’s popularity, especially among ‘floating voters’, when an election approaches. However, these changes may be a function of the preferences the politicians feel the voters have rather than a reaction to the actual views and attitudes of the electorate. This may also be true of changes in fiscal policy: few would disagree that income tax reductions are generally well received but the question of how people react to such changes in public expenditure are less clear cut; whether they are likely to affect the behaviour of the ‘floating voter’ is open to doubt. If public spending policies are in some way important to the general public there are at least two important criteria that have first to be satisfied:

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Public opinion and the privatization of welfare: some theoretical implications.

TL;DR: This work concludes with a discussion of contrasting marxist and liberal accounts which seeks to show that the evidence of ambivalence in popular attitudes about the welfare state supports particular developments in theory.
Journal ArticleDOI

Public expenditure: Perceptions and preferences

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used a questionnaire to ask individuals directly about their perceptions of and preferences for public spending and found that public expenditure perceptions and preferences showed consistent and predictable patterns among young individuals with little or no experience of paying tax.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Determinants of Western European Government Growth 1950-1980

TL;DR: In this article, a modest theoretical framework for understanding government growth is advanced, and specific hypotheses of growth are fitted into the framework, and operationalized for empirical testing Finally, statistical models to account for public sector expansion in each of the dozen nations over the 1950-1980 period are developed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Consumer perceptions and preferences for public expenditure

TL;DR: In this article, consumer evaluations of public spending are analyzed to determine how these factors are related to consumer perceptions and preferences for public expenditure on legal advice, public transport and hospital services.
Posted Content

Savings in Public Services after the Crisis: A Multilevel Analysis of Public Preferences in the EU27

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors empirically test a model for citizen preferences for reducing spending in public services versus government investment in measures to boost the economy as a response to the financial crisis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Why The Government Budget Is Too Small in a Democracy

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the electorate is chronically ignorant of the costs and benefits of many actual and potential government policies, and that this ignorance causes governments to enact budgets smaller than the ones they would enact if the electorate possessed complete information.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Politics of Public Expenditure: American Theory and British Practice

TL;DR: Public expenditure is quite the most visible and quantifiable measure of government activity as mentioned in this paper, and it is therefore surprising that in Britain, as distinct from the United States, this area has been massively neglected by political scientists.